week 15
Reading:
The week 15 reading “An Introduction To Sound Art” by Robert Worby was an interesting read just for the fact that we as humans don’t stop and listen to what the sounds around us are and what they’re coming from. He talks about the art of sound and all the ways there can be sounds and music. I really liked how he talked about how today all we have to do it is search the internet or be a click away from looking up or hearing a sound. The reading also says the sound isn’t a thing you can see or touch. That for me alone is mind-blowing.
Robert talks in great depth of all the things people throughout history did to get where we are today with sound art. When he talks about the history of how sound art had many strands and thread that didn’t join well together at times make sense to me because I had no idea there was even a thing called sound art. There are all types of sound art such as radio, poetry, text and voice, film, and video. Those are just a few of examples. He tells that sound moves the air and leaves nothing behind, that a sound unfolds in it own time and then it’s gone forever; only a memory survives and memory fades quickly. Sound is something that you can’t touch or feel; it has no substance or mass because it is atoms and molecules.
Sound:
“One Square Inch of Silence” by Gordon Hempton is something amazing -- the sounds of nature, like the running water, the birds chirping, the sounds of the animals. We don’t get to hear those kind of things, in most cases just for the fact there is so much going on in today’s world. Like the article said, there are planes and cars so there aren’t many quite spots anymore. The rain forest is one place to stop and listen to what nature had made for the world, all the little sounds that are out and about.
Media:
Susan Pilipaz talks about her personal interest in sound art and what she thought would have meaning for her. She made sound art with World War II instruments. The instruments couldn’t play much anymore but they would make sound and it became about the breath. Susan also did sound art on the forgotten people from the Holocaust; she used sounds that would make people remember those of the past so they could become part of the present.
Connections/ comparisons;
In both the reading and media, sound art is a pretty wide rang that can be more than one thing or sound that can be used in many different ways, along with being manipulated in to a sound that hasn’t been heard or created by objects or sound, along with millions of other things.
Relevant Artist:
I choose Bethan Kellough. She is a composer and sound artist that is based in Los Angeles. She gained her education from the University of Glasgow in Scotland. She was awarded a PhD in Sonic Arts in 2015, researching immersive sound-worlds, spatial aesthetics and the interaction between sonically and visually articulated spaces. I like her sound art for the fact that she uses a lot of nature sounds which I really enjoy. I like how she uses sound as her sculpture. To me this means she can change a sound and manipulate it to a sound she wants to use and make her own, which is interesting.
I was greatly surprised to learn there was such a thing called sound art. Of course I know there are sound around us everyday there is music and all that good stuff. But I had no idle about sound art I am mind baffled to know all my life I never know this was even a thing. Yes, it is amazing that something like this is out in the world and this just go to show the world is so much bigger than I ever could have thought.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=50A7cD8a1nA
One of Bruce Nauman’s works includes telling tehnicians to “drill a hole into the heart of a large tree and insert a microphone.” I myself would really enjoy this because you don’t know what you are going to hear when there is not a person in sight. This is where a microphone is just left in the hole in a tree. That is something I would be interested in finding and hearing.
copyright 2009 Walker Art Center, photo by Cameron Wittig
References
01Bethan kelloug –Descent [touch].(2016 Aug,25).Video Retrieved from httpsi//www.youtube.com/watch?v=50A7cD8A
“One square Inch of Science. Audio fine.” Retrieved from www.onesqare inch.org
Worby Robert. (2006). The introduction to sound art. Retrieved from www.robertwrby.com












